from the the-details-matter dept

This has been rumored for ages, and the White House has certainly been pushing for this almost non-stop for years, but in a similar vein to the ISPs and the RIAA/MPAA coming to a "voluntary agreement" to implement a six strikes policy, the major online ad networks, led by the Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB) along with Google, Microsoft, Yahoo and AOL (and, yes, with the White House) have come to an agreement to stop their ads from appearing on "rogue" sites that are engaged in copyright infringement or selling counterfeit goods via a series of "best practices." The agreement says that the various ad networks who are participating will strive to keep their ads off of sites "that are principally dedicated to selling counterfeit goods or engaging in copyright piracy and have no substantial non-infringing uses."

I have some concerns about this, as I'll discuss below, but on the whole it appears that there's actually some good to come out of this. First off, it's worth noting that all of these guys already have terms of service that bar the use of their ads on sites that primarily engage in such things. While various tech industry haters still tend to believe otherwise, the tech industry has been pretty good at keeping their ads directly away from such sites for years. The ads that tend to get on those sites come from tiny third party ad networks that no one has heard of. In fact, some of the "evidence" against Megaupload was that from very early on, Google kicked it out of its ad program.

Another sign that this agreement probably isn't that bad: the MPAA has already put out a statement about how they hate it, saying that it's not enough. Chris Dodd specifically argues that nothing is going to be enough until everyone else does the copyright holders' job for them, and proactively polices the internet. The fact that no one but the copyright holder can know for certain if something is infringing is not even allowed to enter the discussion in the corrupt minds of the MPAA.

In this case, it appears that this new agreement involves something of a more formalized notice and (possible) takedown system. Copyright holders can submit a complaint to each ad network (individually, not to some central authority), and then the ad network gets to decide how it handles the notice -- but, under the best practices, they will strive to keep their ads from appearing on such sites. Since this is just a voluntary agreement, unlike, say, the DMCA, there's no automatic liability shifting in refusing to pull the ads -- and the agreement makes it clear that the best practices themselves do not establish liability, nor do they create a duty to proactively monitor (though, I could see how copyright holders might later try to raise that issue).

The good thing about this program is that it appears those who worked on it clearly recognize that certain copyright holders may be a little over eager in claiming certain sites are "pirate" sites when they might not be. So the program is designed to be more transparent and to include the clear ability for a site to appeal such a decision and get the ad networks to reconsider. In some ways, this is a step forward from the way it was before, in which Google or others might just kick you out of the program with almost no communication and absolutely no right of appeal. In fact, Google is somewhat infamous for its big white monolithic response to kicking people out of its ad network: basically just telling them "you've violated our terms" with no explanation, no way to find out more, and no way to appeal. Adding an actual appeals process is a step up.

That said, there are still two key concerns here. The first is that even with an appeals process and various safeguards, it's quite likely that legitimate sites that have significant non-infringing purposes will still get caught up in this. We've seen too many false takedowns, false attacks and the like for that not to happen. And even with an appeals process, losing your entire ad network for a period of time can completely sink a small business (and, any site making money on these kinds of ad networks is, by definition, a small business -- because none of these ad networks pay out very much to individual sites).

The second concern is a bigger one: which is that if you look at the history of some of the most important innovations that have helped the content industry grow, they almost always start out as what those content industries deemed "principally dedicated to infringing activity." In the early days of radio, cable TV, VCRs, DVRs, mp3 players, YouTube, etc... they were all attacked as being hotbeds of infringement. Yet, as they grew in popularity, business models developed that helped the content industry tremendously. As I've pointed out in the past, it was only four years after Jack Valenti declared that the VCR was the "Boston Strangler" of the movie business that the home video business surpassed the box office in revenue for Hollywood. Yet, if we allow a system where the copyright holders are able to simply starve these new businesses completely before they've had a chance to develop and mature, I worry that we miss the next VCR, the next DVR, the next mp3 player, the next YouTube -- and whatever tool that comes next that allows content creators to do an even better job connecting with fans, creating new works, distributing new works, promoting those works and eventually monetizing those works.

It's easy to simply try to label all new upstarts as "evil" and kill them off, but history has shown that's generally not a very good idea. The reason those upstarts are successful is not that they enable infringement, but rather that they enable something new and useful that people want and like. The real opportunity is in figuring out ways for content creators to use that to their advantage -- and I fear that programs like this make it easier to simply snuff them out too early.

That said, if there needs to be such a program, this one appears to be the least destructive approach. It doesn't create liability or a proactive duty to police the internet. It allows the networks to make the final call on what do with complaints. It gives the accused sites the ability to appeal whatever decisions are made. Either way, I would imagine that the MPAA and the RIAA already have their incredibly long lists of sites ready and are submitting them everywhere they can... and within a few weeks we'll watch them issue statements about how the new program isn't working and how more needs to be done.

from the good-for-them dept

While more disclosure is generally a good thing, the FTC's new guidelines for blogging disclosure have some pretty massive problems, and probably aren't legal. As more and more people are recognizing this -- and interviews with the FTC folks in charge of this suggest they either haven't put very much thought into this issue or they don't quite know how the world works outside of their government cocoon -- the backlash is growing. Now, the Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB) has stepped in with quite the open letter to the FTC, asking them to scrap the rules, while noting (snarkily) how impossible they are to follow, in practice:

So there I was last Saturday, about to send out on my Twitter feed -- which automatically updates my Facebook page and links to my personal blog -- a photograph of this wonderful baked halibut dish I'd just made as a surprise for my wife. I was in the middle of typing a rave review of the recipe, which I'd pulled from my favorite cookbook, Delicioso! The Regional Cooking of Spain by Penelope Casas. But before I could press the "post" button, I stopped and canceled the whole thing.

I remembered that the book was a freebie, sent to me by an editor at the Alfred A. Knopf publishing house 13 years ago. And I didn't want you guys to haul me into court and fine me for violating the rules you've just promulgated to muzzle social media.

While this may seem silly, it really does highlight the problems with the FTC's rules. They're totally unclear and absolutely could concern things like this. Getting a free book here or there happens all the time -- and the FTC actually claimed that if people don't return them, then they may face sanctions. That's ridiculous. Last month, we ran a fun contest for people to win free copies of a Kevin Smith book. If the winners from our comments mention that book anywhere online, do they need to mention they got the book for free? If they mention it to a friend, do they need to do the same thing? Because most of the time when posting stuff online, people really are just talking to their friends.

Again, it's not clear why people can't just sort this out themselves. People who post bogus reviews of things because someone pays them to, or because of something "free," are going to get called out on it eventually and lose their credibility. When people talk amongst friends, they don't reveal where they got the products they talk about, or if they happened to get a promotional sample -- and that's fine. While you can understand where the FTC is coming from, it really has gone overboard with these rules.